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When
All Stocks Are Value Stocks
Steve Selengut
- Think QDI
Value stocks
are those that tend to trade at lower prices relative to their
fundamental characteristics than their more speculative cousins,
the growth stocks; they have higher than usual dividend yields
and lower P/E and P/B ratios. So when all stock prices are down
significantly, have they all become value stocks? Or, based
on the panicky fear that tends to overwhelm media and financial
experts alike, haven't they all taken on the speculative characteristics
of growth stocks?
Well, to
a certain extent they have, because the lower value stock prices
go, the more likely it is that they will eventually experience
the 15% ROE that typifies the classic growth stock. Interestingly,
by definition, growth stocks are expected to be associated with
profitable companies, a fact that speculators often lose site
of. There are three features that separate value stocks from
growth stocks and two that separate Investment Grade Value (IGV)
stocks from the average, run-of-the-mill, variety.
Value stocks
pay dividends, and have lower ratios than growth stocks. IGV
stock companies also have long-term histories of profitability
and an S & P rating of B+ or higher. Would you be surprised
to learn that neither the DJIA nor the S & P 500 contains
particularly high numbers of IGV stocks? Still, since 1982,
value stocks have outperformed growth stocks 62% of the time.
So when an ugly correction has a makeover, it's likely that
all value stocks transform themselves into growth stocks, at
least temporarily.
Will Rogers
summed up the stock selection quandary nicely with: "Only
buy stocks that go up. If they aren't going to go up, don't
buy them." Many have misunderstood this tongue-in-cheek
observation and joined the buy-anything-high investment club.
You need dig no further than the current lists (June '08) of
"most advancing issues" to see how investors are buying
commodity companies and financial futures at the highest prices
in the history of mankind.
This while
they are shunning IGVSI (Investment Grade Value Stock Index)
companies that have plummeted to their most attractive price
levels in three to five years. Many of the very best multinational
companies in the world are at historically low prices. Wall
Street smiles knowingly (and greedily) as Main Street hucksters
tout gold, currencies, and oil futures as retirement plan safety
nets. Regulatory agencies look the other way as speculations
worm their way into qualified plans of all varieties. Surely
those markets will be regulated some day--- after the next Bazooka-pink,
gooey mess becomes history.
How much
financial bloodshed is necessary before we realize that there
is no safe and easy shortcut to investment success? When do
we learn that most of our mistakes involve greed, fear, or unrealistic
expectations about what we own? Eventually, successful investors
begin to allocate assets in a goal directed manner by adopting
a more realistic investment strategy--- one with security selection
guidelines and realistic performance definitions and expectations.
If you are
thinking of trying a strategy for a year to see if it works,
you're being too short-term sighted--- the investment markets
operate in cycles. If you insist on comparing your performance
with indices and averages, you'll rarely be satisfied. A viable
investment strategy will be a three-dimensional decision model,
and all three decisions are equally important. Few strategies
include a targeted profit taking discipline--- dimension two.
The first dimension involves the selection of securities. The
third?
How should
an investor determine what stocks to buy, and when to buy them?
We've discussed the features of value and growth stocks and
seen how any number of companies can qualify as either dependent
upon where we are in terms of the market cycle or where they
are in terms of their own industry, sector, or business cycles.
Value stocks (and the debt securities of value stock companies)
tend to be safer than growth stocks. But IGVSI stocks are super-screened
by a unique rating system that is based on company survival
statistics--- very important stuff.
In the late
90's, it was rumored that a well-known value fund manager was
asked why he wasn't buying dot-coms, IPOs, etc. When he said
that they didn't qualify as value stocks, he was told to change
his definition--- or else. IGV stocks include a quality element
that minimizes the risk of loss and normally smoothes the angles
in the market cycle. The market value highs are typically not
as high, but the market value lows are most often not as low
as they are with either growth or Wall Street definition value
stocks. They work best in conjunction with portfolios that have
an income allocation of at least 30%--- you need to know why.
How do we
create a confidence building IGV stock selection universe without
getting bogged down in endless research? Here are five filters
you can use to come up with a listing of higher quality companies:
(1) An S & P rating of B+ or better. Standard & Poor's
combines many fundamental and qualitative factors into a letter
ranking that speaks only to the financial viability of the companies.
Anything rated lower adds more risk to your portfolio.
(2) A history
of profitability. Although it should seem obvious, buying stock
in a company that has a history of profitable operations is
inherently less risky. Profitable operations adapt more readily
to changes in markets, economies, and business growth opportunities.
(3) A history of regular, even increasing, dividend payments.
Companies will go to great lengths, and endure great hardships,
before electing either to cut or to omit a dividend. Dividend
changes are important, absolute size is not.
(4) A Reasonable
Price Range. Most Investment Grade stocks are priced above $10
per share and only a few trade at levels above $100. An unusually
high price may be caused by higher sector or company-specific
speculation while an inordinately low price may be a good warning
signal. (5) An NYSE listing--- just because it's easier.
Your selection
universe will become the backbone of your equity asset allocation,
so there is no room for creative adjustments to the rules and
guidelines you've established--- no matter how strongly you
feel about recent news or rumor. There are approximately 450
IGV stocks to choose from--- and you'll find the name recognition
comforting. Additionally, as these companies gyrate above and
below your purchase price (as they absolutely will), you can
be more confident that it is merely the nature of the stock
market and not an imminent financial disaster.
The QDI?
Quality, diversification, and income.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.investmentmanagementbooks.com
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor:
The Book that Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and
"A Millionaire's Secret Investment Strategy"
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